1984 276 1984 was the year that the first Shadows CD appeared, the compilation Compact Shadows from Polydor, released in August. It was also the year of Guardian Angel , released in November (in a first for the group, it was issued on vinyl and CD concurrently, the latter however in very limited quantities). The Introduction by RB to this Album (see main entry below) expresses one perception of the Album. There is another. The topic, which merits the space assigned to it here on the ground that it touches on one of the most contentious issues in the group’s recorded work, is discussed in detail in MC’s book The Shadows At Polydor , pp. 20ff. The following comments summarise briefly the arguments advanced there, and add one or two fresh considerations. (i) Is it the case that the 1984 Guardian Angel interrupted the “usual formula of cover versions”? Hardly. Hits Right Up Your Street (1981) and XXV (1983) can be so described, in broad terms at any rate. But Change Of Address (1980) and Life In The Jungle (1982) cannot. In reality, it was only the next Album to appear, the 1986 Moonlight Shadows , that established the principle that ‘covers rule’. It proved to be a ‘cover’ Album with a vengeance, 100% derivative in its choice of material: it was marketed undisguisedly as such, and surely with the group’s blessing, considering that it promised to restore their high profile in the world of music (a promise amply fulfilled). Not surprisingly, now that the publicity machine had got things just right, Moonlight Shadows was followed up with three Albums that were also essentially ‘cover’-orientated. (ii) It is commonly stated, or implied, that (a) The Shadows worked hard to give the fans what they wanted; and (b) that the fans gleefully accepted what they were offered (“The fans loved it”, it has been claimed). It is wholly impossible to reconcile this picture with what actually happened. In the first place, it has been noted that once the group made the Album, they themselves proceeded to act as if it had never been released. Fans attending any of the numerous 1984 concert appearances were barely made aware of a new Album. Publicity was practically non-existent; if there was any enthusiasm among group members, it was nowhere in evidence until the next decade. Second, there were far fewer Shadows fans around by 1984 (whether because they were disillusioned, or had just lost interest in ‘pop’, or had family and other commitments to occupy their time and drain their wallets), and a very large proportion 1 of the residue would not give Guardian Angel the time of day: in the perception of many, this particular Album had moved further away, to an unacceptable degree, from the basic three guitars + drums sound of the glorious 1960s. In the words of one review of the time, there was “a wall of keyboard and synthesiser sound ... the whole album seems to have been recorded in Echo Canyon”. (iii) In fact, during the 1980s, and indeed in the closing years of the 1970s too, listeners reared on 1960s music found it hard or plain impossible to come to terms with what they regarded as the black sheep of the music-making armoury, “keyboards and synthesisers”: they were artificial, alien to what was perceived (bizarrely) to be an age of musical purity and innocence! But of course they were here to stay, and The Shadows themselves continued to make use of them, both in the studio and on stage, regardless. Nowadays, in contrast, many fans have come to terms with this aspect of their music-making, mainly, one suspects, because they have become habituated to them over a period of time. What sounded strange and outlandish in 1984 or thereabouts has come to appear much more innocuous, or less threatening, now. By the same token, the Guardian Angel Album, which was to a very great extent ignored or vilified in 1984, now appears to be regarded as one of the gems of the Shadows’ corpus, the saving light of their 80s recorded work! (iv) The distinction drawn between ‘original’ and ‘cover’ Albums has resulted in a blanket dichotomy, implausible in itself, which commonly heaps extravagant praise on the former and unqualified scorn on the latter, without any serious attempt in either category to differentiate between what is good and bad, or good in one respect, not so good in another. Sometimes, when the disreputable covers are the subject of discussion, group members are quoted to play down the element of creativity that went into producing them. The problem here is that different group members, quizzed long after the event, have said different things at different times, and just as many cases can be adduced of unequivocal statements to the effect that enormous care was taken over such material. In any case, as will be seen on a couple of occasions in the track analyses of the Album which follows this discussion, there are examples of group members summarily dismissing original compositions too (see notably on [393] TURNING POINT below). The policy adopted in this book with regard to heavy concentrations of cover versions is not to dismiss them in a body out of hand, but to assess each one individually, bypassing completely the often conflicting pronouncements from those directly involved. To draw a more extreme but essentially germane comparison: the many uncomplimentary, vitriolic or downright savage judgements passed on their music-making by one or other member of The Beatles after the disbanding of the group (more particularly John Lennon and Paul McCartney) may be intrinsically interesting and may throw light on the music-making process. What such remarks do not do is entitle the music critic to base judgements about a given composition on what is essentially assertion or hearsay (much of it, uttered at different times, in different places, and no doubt in different moods, self-contradictory) rather than on the music itself. (v) That all original material (broadly defined) in the more favoured Albums is of a uniformly high standard is a proposition that the present writer is unable to accept. Guardian Angel is a creditable set, but it has its less assured moments. [387] THE SATURDAY WESTERN has all the hallmarks of pale imitation, evocative of nothing in particular. The title song [391] seems to me an unmitigated disaster, an overblown extravaganza: nice tune, nice Mark Knopfleresque guitar (the whole thing sounds like a Dire Straits pastiche), shame about the (at times atrociously incoherent) lyrics, 2 riddled as they are with a risible tone of self-importance. Now, change the words, and give it to Mark ... Finally here, the pronounced and often convoluted “keyboard/synth” parts on [388] LOOK BACK ON LOVE must surely have induced many Shadows fans of the time to conclude that this level of experimentalism and sophistication, verging at times on the avant-garde, was not for them. A different scenario for the sorry story (as it has been represented) of Guardian Angel suggests itself. In the following decade, when the group was no more, and interviewers came looking for explanations for all kinds of things, the grim sales figures of Guardian Angel called for investigation and comment. An explanation, essentially a single, uncomplicated explanation, was advanced to explain why it was such a flop. The group, it was averred, suspended the well-worn formula for selling records to give the fans originals; it did not work; back they went willy-nilly to their old ways. It has been seen that the group did no such thing. Guardian Angel fared poorly not solely because of the lack of cover versions, but from other causes too, as outlined above, not least of which was, ironically enough, the perceived un-Shadows- like nature of the sound. Most fans, yearning for a return to a past long beyond recall, simply did not like it, not in the 80s anyway. August 1984 A-Single, Polydor POSP 694 [384] ON A NIGHT LIKE THIS (John David) {B: [ 341] THING-ME-JIG from September 1981 LP Hits Right Up Your Street } 277 The picture cover of this, their only Single of the year (a bathing costume clad female lying on a lilo in a swimming pool), reflects the then commonplace practice of letting artwork departments loose on product without regard for aptness; the title is minuscule into the bargain! The A-side is a pleasant, catchy song; easy on the ear; it romps along in a delightful fashion. This rousing country-rock vocal delivered by Bruce Welch with support from Tony Rivers (the second, and the last, vocal Single put out by Polydor on The Shadows’ behalf), was produced by Stuart Colman, who had become Shakin’ Stevens’ producer in 1980. Composer John David too, formerly bassist with Dave Edmunds’ Rockpile, was associated with the Welsh rocker. Stevens 3 though had four successive Top 10 Singles in the course of 1984, The Shadows had none. The track, which reappeared on the November Album, enjoyed quite a bit of airplay, but just missed being a chart hit. The attempting of something different frequently met with a hostile response from long-term fans. A correspondent in New Gandy Dancer (21 [1984], p.20) wrote: “Bruce doesn’t like the new Single … particularly the mix. To me, the 45 sounds like a Shakin’ Stevens reject …” Trainspotter’s Note Tony Hoffman reports: “The Shadows recorded another track for producer SC … when they cut ON A NIGHT LIKE THIS. It was a vocal called ‘It’s Too Late’ written by John David.
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